My perspective on what you wrote is completely opposite. The real estate bubble was predicted by two categories of investors. The first category was those investors who were very sharp generalists. There weren't too many of those and a whole lot of seasoned financial people got caught, which defines a crisis and subsequent bailouts. The second category was those investors who understood the real estate business, i.e., specialists in the real estate industry. I was one of those, and called the top of the real estate bubble within a year and the top of the stock bubble within 5 months.jdcpapa wrote:I cannot contrast your interpretation of Koo vs Bass. Because I do not follow either one. What I do know is that the real estate bubble could have been predicted by anyone seasoned in financial matters. Bass took it to them and played it and won. This does not make him a no nonsense guru. His ability to process and act on the obvious goes to the essence of this site. Knowledge. The only question that remains is the play.
Here's what I've learned since. After making that call, I thought I was a very sharp generalist. In fact, I was not. The fact is that I understood the evolution of a real estate bubble, but not the evolution of a post bailout bubble. So when I called the top of this stock market bubble, it wasn't even close. In retrospect, I realized that I had understanding of real estate finance and its ramifications that other folks in the financial industry just didn't have. But I was nowhere near the generalists.
Now getting onto Bass, Paulson, or any of the few who cleaned Goldman's et al pockets out when the real estate bubble burst. Some of them may have had specialized knowledge in real estate, some of them may have been lucky. I read Bass and I don't think he was one of those. Paulson probably was lucky.
Koo is completely off base. To know that, see what Koo recommended for Japan and the US and see what Bass says in that article I linked that debunks that. The fact that Bass is right is pretty obvious to me because it's already happened. Koo's theories have led Japan into disaster. Of course, he can always say that he never knew a tsunami would hit and without that there would have been a recovery. But there are historical productivity and population correlations that go back a long time that have told those who observed on the basis of a simple back of the envelope calculation that Japan can't grow its debt and couldn't grow its debt and can't pay off its debt. The US was able to pay off its debt post World War II for lots of reasons that don't exist at present from the numbers I'm looking at. World population has been going up for two millenia and any theory that puts that continued assumption into play can't work. Even a leveling off isn't enough without productivity improvements that are far outside historical experience.